The Cleveland Browns have made their first pick of the 2024 NFL draft, grabbing in-state product Michael Hall Jr. from Ohio State.
The run on defensive tackles continues, and the Browns have added even more pass rush to go on their already-loaded defensive line. It is a pick that surprised me because of the room they already have, but it’s a great pick in my books.
Hall is a fantastic athlete at the position, getting a 9.56 relative athletic score with an insane 1.65 10-yard split while running a 4.75 40-yard dash. He’s so ridiculously explosive off the line of scrimmage with excellent body control and gives opposing offensive lines fits on passing downs.
You won’t find many in this class that have more violent hands than Hall. His bag of tricks as a pass rusher is pretty impressive, and he can be a solid role player immediately. So, how do you guys grade the pick of Michael Hall Jr from Ohio State as the pick at 54?
Listen to former Browns DE Carl Nassib call out the pick!
The Cleveland Browns are on the board in the 2024 NFL draft, landing the Ohio State defensive tackle Michael Hall Jr. with pick No. 54. And announcing the pick for the Browns? Former third round pick and defensive end Carl Nassib.
Nassib is representing the Trevor Project, an organization that supports and advocates for LGBTQIA youth, as he makes the pick for the team that drafted him. Nassib, of course, was a “Hard Knocks” star the year they were in Cleveland, giving financial advice to the other defensive linemen and how to invest their money.
He was later released on “Hard Knocks” by the Browns, landed with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and played himself into a sizeable second contract with the Las Vegas Raiders.
With the 54th pick in the 2024 NFL draft, the Cleveland Browns are the last team to make a selection, adding Ohio State defensive tackle Michael Hall Jr. to their defensive trenches.
Hall Jr. is one of the most prolific pass-rushing interior defensive linemen in the class, his pass rush win rate and pass rush success numbers rank highly. While he only accumulated three sacks this past season with the Buckeyes, he was constantly in the backfield and wreaking havoc in opposing backfields.
While he has work to do as a run defender, Hall is in a position to ease himself onto the field and predominantly on passing downs. Where he is already a polished player. He now joins a room of Dalvin Tomlinson, Quinton Jefferson, Maurice Hurst, Shelby Harris, and Siaki Ika.
From Akron, the Browns keep the Northeast Ohio kid in Northeast Ohio.
The wait was worth it as the Browns landed a prolific pass rusher.
Projecting the Jaguars’ selections on day two of the 2024 NFL draft
Round one of the 2024 NFL draft is in the books, with Jacksonville moving down the order and netting picks this year and next, yet ultimately selecting the prospect it claimed was the choice all along on Thursday night, wide receiver Brian Thomas Jr. from LSU.
“He was going to be the pick at 17,” Jaguars general manager Trent Baalke said after the first round.
“We just felt the way the board looked and where the needs were, the teams in between us, we felt we had a chance. There’s risk, there’s reward. You make the move back, but we felt we were going to get a really good football player that we had high on our board with the move back. Fortunate that Brian was still there.”
Moving forward, the Jaguars have eight selections over the draft’s remaining six rounds, including picks No. 48 in the second round and No. 96 in the third round on Friday.
Additionally, the trade Jacksonville completed with Minnesota on Thursday strengthened the Jaguars’ arsenal of 2025 picks to nine, including six between rounds one through four. The club could use present and future picks as chips for a potential trade-up over the next 36 hours.
Jaguars Wire projects Jacksonville’s approach to its day two selections below.
Jaguars Wire used the Pro Football Focus mock draft simulator for this exercise, with all slider settings median.
Atlanta receives: No. 48 overall (second round), No. 116 (fourth round, via New Orleans)
A bigger move-up was considered here as Buffalo took cornerback Cooper DeJean with the first pick of the second round.
But with the run on wide receivers continuing into the 30s, pushing the next defensive back selection to No. 42 (Houston: safety Tyler Nubin), Jacksonville was fortunate to see another respected prospect slip outside their pre-draft projected range and didn’t rush a move in this scenario.
Still available at pick No. 43, Jacksonville trades with Atlanta — arguably in need of more picks after spending its first on a quarterback who probably won’t start until 2026 — to hop cornerback-needy Las Vegas (No. 44) and Indianapolis (No. 46) and take Alabama’s Kool-Aid McKinstry.
The 5-foot-11 and 1/2-inch, 199-pound McKinstry is considered one of if not the best man coverage cornerback in this draft class, making it surprising that he fell out of the first round. His average athletic testing results while running on a Jones fracture in his right foot at Alabama’s pro day could have played a factor.
Still, McKinstry proved dominant against opposing receivers throughout his college career. He started a game by Week 2 of his freshman year and several more before it was over, defended 16 passes as a sophomore and allowed 40+ receiving yards in a game just twice as a junior.
In total, McKinstry tallied 92 tackles, two sacks, five tackles for loss, two interceptions and 25 passes defended over 42 games and three seasons with the Crimson Tide. He allowed 47.9% (70-of-146) of his career targets in coverage to be caught, per PFF.
With 35 punts returned, 418 punt return yards and 11.9 yards per punt return on his résumé from Alabama, McKinstry could reasonably fill the NFL’s recently-instituted second return specialist position for Jacksonville.
Round 3, Pick No. 96 (compensatory pick): Michael Hall Jr., DL, Ohio State
The Jaguars held onto the cornerstone of their defense by giving edge rusher Josh Allen a five-year extension earlier in April and solidified their interior defensive line by signing veteran Arik Armstead in free agency the month before.
But Jacksonville’s defensive trenches remain in need of depth reinforcements and potential long-term starters. Four interior linemen, including Armstead, will play the 2024 season at 30+ years old.
Enter Michael Hall Jr. from Ohio State, who Jacksonville snags here with plenty of tread on his tires. A redshirt season in 2021 and lingering injuries in 2022 limited Hall to 301 defensive snaps over his first two seasons, before starting in seven of 12 appearances in 2023.
In those three years, over 714 snaps, Hall recorded 45 tackles including 10 for loss, six sacks, one fumble recovery and 48 quarterback pressures, the latter stat via PFF. His 7.5 tackles for loss in 2022 led the Buckeyes, despite his lack of consistent playing time that season.
Hall presents a unique frame — 6-foot-2 and 3/4-inch, 290 pounds — making him a tweener defensive line prospect, likely to split time between strong-side defensive end and three-technique defensive tackle.
No matter how you look at Hall positionally, he possesses an above-average wingspan and arm length for a defensive line prospect, which is certain to catch Baalke’s eye. 13 of the 17 defensive line prospects he’s drafted in his career as a general manager have had 33+ inch arms; Hall’s are 33 and 1/2-inch.
Which draft prospect stood out most in Mobile this week?
The practices are in the books and all that’s left is the 2024 Senior Bowl itself in Mobile, Ala.
For many players, the game won’t be nearly as important, though. On the practice field, NFL coaches worked directly with many of the top prospects of the 2024 NFL draft class and had a chance to line them up one-on-one against other top prospects.
While it can be for some positions — like running back and safety, for instance — to really show their skills and physicality in practice, others had a chance to show their strengths.
With the game still two days away (Saturday at 1 p.m. ET), here are the players who helped themselves most with some stellar Senior Bowl practices this week:
With the Senior Bowl underway this week many of the top players around college football from last season are getting the chance to boost their 2024 NFL Draft stock.
That is the case for three big contributors to Buckeyes defense from last season as safety Josh Proctor, linebacker Tommy Eichenberg, and defensive tackle Michael Hall Jr. are all taking part in Senior Bowl festivities.
Senior Bowl practices are a good chance for offensive and defensive lineman to stand out with one-on-one battles in the trenches.
The quickness of #OhioState DL Michael Hall was a problem for blockers today in 1-on-1s. He's a really disruptive 280 pounds. pic.twitter.com/jtpKtkoN1Y
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Summer scouting is always a fun time, made for evaluators and Twitter scouts to fall in love with the upcoming NFL draft prospects for the upcoming season. During the offseason, there was a lot of buzz around Ohio State defensive tackle Michael Hall Jr. The twitched-up interior defensive lineman had shown a ton of flashes as a redshirt freshman in 2022, giving a lot of folks things to get really excited about.
Flashing forward to now, it wouldn’t have been a surprise to many that Hall would be a 2024 NFL Draft prospect and a guy we would be dissecting in January. With the 2024 Reese’s Senior Bowl now allowing for underclassmen to participate, it also isn’t a shock that Hall is down in Mobile turning some heads.
The process, however, isn’t quite how most envisioned. After collecting 7.5 tackles for loss and 4.5 sacks as a part-time player in 2022, Hall had a down year as a redshirt sophomore. In 12 games with the Buckeyes, he had just 24 total tackles, two tackles for loss and 1.5 sacks. He did not take the jump that most expected.
That made it a slight surprise when Hall opted to declare early, bypassing the chance to return to Columbus and increase his draft stock. Coming into the week in Mobile, most viewed him as an enigma and had a tough time projecting where Hall fits into the 2024 class. Coming out of Day Two, and the first practice on Tuesday, we are starting to get a lot more clarity.
On Monday, Hall and the rest of the Senior Bowl participants weighed in to begin the week. The body typing aspect of scouting is extremely underrated. Hall came in light, which was expected based on his film and past listings at Ohio State.
His only being 280 pounds as an interior defensive lineman isn’t ideal but the important key for Hall is that there is easy projection to putting on good weight. A big reason for that is there is no bad weight for the most part, and he is extremely long (33 ⅛” arms, 81 ¼” wingspan). There is plenty of room to add mass without sacrificing athleticism. That length should also allow Hall to project to either even or odd fronts, which is huge.
Then Hall took the field on Tuesday and was stellar. He was a consistent performer, creating penetration in team periods and winning the majority of his 1-on-1 opportunities. Quite simply, the former Buckeye had eye-popping moments of dominance after the first practice.
One source within the NFL had some high praise for Hall, who has been turning heads through two days.
“You just don’t see that combination of explosiveness and fluidity from an interior defensive lineman too often,” they said. “It is going to be hard for a team to pass him up twice. I don’t think he gets out of the top 50 in April.”
Some Ohio State players will be taking part in the Reese’s Senior Bowl. #GoBucks
With the college football season in the rearview mirror and just the Super Bowl left to play in the NFL, draft season is quickly approaching for many football fans.
For many of the top players in college football, this last season is was the last opportunity to put game film out there to get drafted this April. There’s one more opportunity to make a splash with the arrival of the Senior Bowl this week.
We wish the best of luck to all three players as a good week of practices, the game, and interviews with teams, could go a long way toward boosting their NFL Draft profile.
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No general manager, no head coach, no first-round pick, no problem. We’ll still give you our first Panthers mock draft of the 2024 offseason.
The Carolina Panthers don’t have much as they enter the first weekend of the 2024 offseason.
They don’t have a general manager, they don’t have a head coach and they don’t even have first-round pick—an especially miserable prospect given that they finished with a league-worst 15 losses. So, yeah, there’s not much hope to be had either.
But even with the Panthers seemingly starting back from scratch, let’s try to give you some of that hope anyway!
Buckeye defensive tackle, [autotag]Michael Hall Jr.[/autotag], one of multiple Ohio State defenders with eligibility remaining, has declared for the NFL draft. The junior has battle injuries during his time in Columbus, and had a solid career.
Hall Jr. will leave having amassed 45 tackles, and 6 sacks during his three seasons playing for the Buckeyes. He played a solid game against the Tigers in his last time wearing the Scarlet and Gray, registering 3 tackles. Many believe that Hall Jr. will be drafted in the middle rounds, and we will find out shortly.
Thank you Michael for your Buckeyes contributions and we wish you the best at the next level!
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